Wednesday, July 3, 2013

The Curse of Macbeth

The
Scottish Play and the The Bard's Play are euphemisms for William
Shakespeare's Macbeth. The first is a reference to the play's Scottish
setting, the second a reference to Shakespeare's popular nickname.
According to a theatrical superstition, called the Scottish curse,
speaking the name Macbeth inside a theatre will cause disaster. A
variation of the superstition forbids direct quotation of the play
(except during rehearsals) while inside a theater.

Because of this superstition, the lead character is most often referred
to as the Scottish King or Scottish Lord. Sometimes Mackers is used to
avoid saying the name, mostly in North America.

As success or failure in the theater can be influenced by so many
intangible and unpredictable factors, it's not surprising that actors
and other theater types maintain a variety of long-standing
superstitions, which often are taken very seriously. (The most famous is
the insistence on saying "break a leg" rather than "good luck.")

Two such superstitions float around Macbeth. The first is that it's bad
luck to even say “Macbeth” except during rehearsal or performance. When
referring to the work one instead uses circumlocutions, such as “the
Scottish play” or “Mackers” or “the Scottish business” or “the Glamis
comedy” or just “that play." Some say this rule applies only when inside
a theater; it’s OK, therefore, to use the dread name in other settings –
like classrooms, for instance.

The remedy, if someone does happen to utter the unutterable, is to leave
the room, close the door, turn around three times, say a dirty word (or
spit, some say), then knock on the door and ask to be let back in. If
you can’t do all that, you simply quote from Hamlet, act 1, scene 4:
“Angels and ministers of grace defend us!”

The second superstition is that the play itself brings ill luck to cast
and crew, and many productions of Macbeth have, in fact, encountered
unfortunate circumstances. The supposed origin story for this is that
Shakespeare used “authentic” witches’ chants in the play; as punishment,
real witches cast a curse on the play, condemning it for all time. The Curse of Macbeth